Device for administering immunication against virus

ABSTRACT

Live avirulent virus used to immunize against smallpox, measles, or mumps, or a combination of them, is applied as a dry deposit on a physiologically inert surface of a device adapted to be held against the unbroken skin of an animal to be immunized. Illustratively, cowpox virus as a dry surface deposit is applied at the midpoint of a plastic bandage; it is used by applying the bandage for a period of time to a body site at which the immunization is to be applied.

llnited States Patent [1 1 Counter DEVICE FOR ADMINISTERING IMMUNICATION AGAINST VIRUS [75] Inventor: Frederick T. Counter, Greenfield,

Ind.

[73] Assignee: Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis,

Ind.

[22] Filed: June 4, 1973 [21] Appl. No.: 367,089

Related US. Application Data [63] Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 190,869, Oct. 20,

1971, abandoned.

[ Sept. 24, 1974 OTHER PUBLICATIONS Chemical Abstracts, Vol. 35, 1941, pp. 1118-1119 Ammunological Studies on the Function of Skin, Isikawa.

Chemical Abstracts, Vol. 69, 1968, p. 10,302, Article l09829c, Dispersions for Percutaneous Application, Medneczky.

Chemical Abstracts, Vol. 19, 1925, p. 119, Vaccination of the Rabbit Against Staphylococcus by Way of the Skin and by Way of Digestive Track, Achille Urbain.

Primary ExaminerAldrich F. Medbery Attorney, Agent, or Firm-Joseph A. Jones; Everet F. Smith [5 7] ABSTRACT Live avirulent virus used to immunize against smallpox, measles, or mumps, or a combination of them, is applied as a dry deposit on a physiologically inert surface of a device adapted to be held against the unbroken skin of an animal to be immunized. Illustratively, cowpox virus as a dry surface deposit is applied at the midpoint of a plastic bandage; it is used by applying the bandage for a period of time to a body site at which the immunization is to be applied.

9 Claims, 8 Drawing Figures Pmmmsirzmu I I I 8 4 Fig. 4 IO INVENTOR.

FREDE RICK T COUNTER DEVICE FOR ADMINISTERING IMMUNICATION AGAINST -VIRUS CROSS REFERENCE This application is a continuation-in-part of my copending application Ser. No. 190,869, which was filed Oct. 20, 1971 and is now abandoned.

BACKGROUNDOF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the-Invention This inventionconcernsthe administration of a live avirulentvirus,frequently an attenuated live ,virus, to an animal in ,Which the administered virus evokes an immune reaction, leaving the animal immune to natural attack by the .virus. Suchimmunizingvirus hashitherto been administered by injection or by application to a scarified surface. I

2. The PriorArt U.S. Pat. ,No. 1,212,927. shows a vaccinating device. The device appears tobe amechanical instrument to be attachedtoan arm, comprising ascarifer and an applicator for liquid vaccine.

U.S. Pat. No.-, 2,'23 '5,436 appears toteach apressuresensitive bandage device especially useful intesting for allergic reactions. Diverse allergens are confined in receptacles in a bandage structure so arranged that the different allergenshave different localities at which to exhibit their reactions, yet are allapplied in the same bandage.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,489,675 provides for a bandage with a container for an ointment or medicamentbuilt integrally into the bandage structure.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,522,309 is corcemed with an allergy testing instrument, and in particular represents a way of combining the operations of scarification and application of the allergen.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,575,648 is concerned with an applicator to be used in the application of a vaccine or the like to a-domestic animal.

U.S. Pat. No. 2,619,962 patented Dec. 2, 1962, for a vaccination appliance appears to pertain to a metal patch bearing a plurality of sharp points, intended to be used to scarify a vaccination site after that site has first been sterilized and then had a liquid vaccine applied to it.

U.S. Reissue Pat. No. 25,637 discloses a device presenting a bandage-like support comprising backing, adhesive, and dried vaccine, comprising alsoa scarifier presenting sharp teeth that are intended to perforate the skin. This device is unsatisfactory because it continues to induce scarification wounds long after the need for scarification is past, and even with good management, such wounds tend to become infected.

' U.S. Pat. No. 3,598,122 discloses a bandage comprising abacking layer, areservoir tohold a systemically active drug, and a cover layer, the entire article being held in skin contact by a pressure-sensitive adhesive layer. v

U.S. Pat. No. 3,598,123 discloses a bandage bearing, on a skin approaching surface, a plurality of microcapsules which contain a drug.

Virus vaccines, usually as aqueous liquid preparations, but to some extent-also as dry solids, are articles of commerce.

SUMMARY DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT This invention arises from the discovery that live avirulent viruses, used for immunization againstrecognized virus diseases, readily gain entry'to the system when they are held in intimate contact withunbroken, unabraded, unscarified skin of an animal that sweats through its skin. lllustratively, dogs, cattle, and rabbits do not sweat through their skins, whereas horses, humans and various other animals do. i

The belief has long been held that a live virus could not gain useful entry to a body through unbroken skin, the outer layer of which has been thought of as a very thin, horn-like layer, essentially impermeable to molecules as large as those'of a virus. Thesuccess of the invention refutes the arts belief.

The present inventor does not know themechanism .by which his invention immunizes animals, but does call attention to the fact that the unbroken skin is not a continuous surface. Rather, hair follicles, sebaceous glands, sweat glands and the like provide natural openings into the interior of the body. Future research may ascertain that the precise entry portal is found in some particular detail of skin structure.

It is recognized that the first entry by a virus molecule into a living cell in which the virus becomes well established and begins to replicate actively is all that is needed to initiate the immunizing reaction, and for .the immunization process to be successful. Typically, a two-hundred-fold increase, approximately, in virus abundance takes place in less than a day, for each such succesful virus invasion of a living cell. The normal virus multiplicatiopn process promptly makes up any possible deficiency in abundance of originally applied vaccination material.

In light, of this discovery, the device is used to deliver a suitable dry, immunizing, avirulent live virus in immunizing manner by providing intimate and substantially continuous contact betweenthe dry virus onthe device and the skin of an animal that sweats through its skin, for a period of time long enough that the virus gains .entry and initiates the immune reaction process, and

thereafter such contact is discontinued.

The virus used in the immunizingdevices is oneor more of the viruses which immunize against smallpox, mumps, and measles. No novel immunizing viruses .;are

disclosed here. The live viruses conventionally used in in the new devices. The viruses used for immunizing against mumps and measles are live, attenuated strains of the viruses which cause mumps and measles. Such strains have been isolated from animals with the diseases, and attenuated by treatment with toxic chemicals or other environmental factors until the virus has been weakened. The attenuation of an immunizing virus is stopped when the virus is still antigenic, but has been so weakened that it is avirulent.

The virus used to immunize against smallpox is the natural cowpox virus. Surprisingly, the cowpox virus has the ability to immunize against smallpox, but does not cause smallpox. The virus is avirulent; it causes only a harmless, localized infection in the vaccinated animal.

It is well known in the vaccination art that, for the convenience of the patient and of the physician, more live viruses than one can be applied at a time. Subject to the judgment of the physician or veterinarian as to the age, condition, and other aspects of the subject to be immunized, more viruses than one, of those here indicated, can be applied at one time by the device of this invention. When such simultaneous multiple immunizations are desired, all the viruses, each in the amount representing about one standard dose if used in liquid form, can be applied to the carrying device, or bandage, and they can be dried together. Also, if desired, they can be mixed in aqueous form and dried, or they can be dried from aqueous form separately and applied as a mixture of the resulting solids, in powder form.

Equally, the aqueous virus suspension can be contacted with a bibulous, water-insoluble polymer such as a lightly cross-linked polyacrylamide to yield a virusbearing gel which can then be partially dried to yield a sliceable solid or completely dried to yield a grindable solid. A thin slice or a fine dust of ground powder can be the vehicle in which the virus is brought to the surface of the support means used to hold the virus in contact with the skin.

To facilitate holding the immunizing virus in a single spot long enough for the virus to gain entry, the virus is deposited on a physiologically inert and preferably moisture impermeable surface that can be held against the skin for the necessary time. Conveniently, this physiologically inert surface is a surface of a small object. lllustratively, it can be a small disc, rectangle, oval, or other shape of an inert polymer such as glass, a phenol-formaldehyde resin, polystyrene, cellulose film, polyvinyl chloride, epoxy resin, or the like. Desirably the small object can be flexible and compliant, to facilitate making intimate and continuous skin contact. It can also be held in place by a pressure-sensitive adhesive, or by a fabric overwrap in the character of a bandage, or in other ways. The art of manufacturing small, compliant, flexible, prefabricated bandages to be affixed by pressure-sensitive adhesive provides many completely satisfactory carriers to be used in this inventron.

The virus suspension can also be applied to the surface of a gauze pad or the like, provided that sufficient live virus remains at the skin-contacting surface to effect surface contact with no obstruction to the virus between support and skin.

In order to enjoy the advantages and benefits of this invention it is essential that the virus-bearing surface be free of features that would, if present, tend to cut, lacerate, scarify, abrade, or otherwise break the intact surface of the skin at the time of application. A surface free of such injurious features is called, for purposes of the present specification and claims, a benign surface.

The art preparation of an immunizing virus usually calls for the virus to be taken up in aqueous saline, to which glycerine or other humectant substance may be added. To facilitate the presentation of the dry virus according to this invention, such humectants are preferably omitted, leaving an essentially aqueous saline suspension of the virus.

in one convenient manner of making the device of the present invention, the aqueous virus is applied as a small drop at or near the midpoint of a plastic surface of a small bandage-like structure, and there promptly air-dried. Alternatively, the virus can be dried in laboratory or production equipment, such as a lyophilizing apparatus, reduced to a powder, and the powder applied to an adhesive spot on the supporting article. However formed, the dry virus can be modified by addition to it of a bulking agent such as lactose, glucose,

a protein hydrolysate, a natural gum such as guar or a synthetic gum such as methyl cellulose.

The bulking agent can be combined with the aqueous virus and applied as the virus is applied; or may be applied first, awaiting the application of the virus. The bulking agent can be omitted; in some uses it is convenient, but unnecessary.

The amount of virus to be applied can vary. Effective amounts will range from about 10 to about l0 EID per deposit. For comparison, current immunization practice ordinarily makes use of a virus presenting about 10 EID per 0.1 ml., and 0.02 ml. is the standard amount applied in an immunization. Thus, in the prior art immunization practice, on the order of 2 X 10 EID is administered, which is usually regarded as a substantial excess. Dosages of the same order of magnitude, more or less, are effective amounts according to the present invention.

Virus preparations are quantified as to strength by the EID unit, the unit being that amount of the preparation which, when introduced into each egg of a statistically significant group of embryonated hens eggs, evokes an infective response in fifty percent of the eggs. The expression EID abbreviates the expression, egg infective does. Insofar as the present inventor knows, no measurement of an actual quantity of live virus has ever been made.

This invention offers the great advantage over the prior art that the vaccine in dry form is much more stable to aging than it is in aqueous suspension. Vaccine in dry form is an article of commerce, and the dry virus is recognized in the art to have a storage stability such that it retains its potency about six times as long as does the aqueous suspension. The recall date on dry virus is typically 18 month as contrasted with days for the aqueous suspension. That benefit inures here. Routinely in the prior art, 20 or more doses of dry virus are reconstituted at one time by the addition of sterile water. This not only imposes upon the physician or veterinarian the inconvenience of sterile laboratory techniques and the necessity to provide sterile water free of objectionable material, it also furnishes a plurality of doses at one time. It has not been convenient, and it is not commonly practiced, to reconstitute a single dose at a time. Any vaccine thus reconstituted begins to age at once and is routinely discarded if not used within 90 days.

The duration of skin contact necessary for the dry virus on a device of this invention to gain entry and be effective will vary with the patients species, age, physical condition, condition of skin, activity level, perspiration rate, and other factors. Effective contact time can be as short as minutes or as long as a day. 8 hour contact durations have given good results.

For cosmetic reasons it is routine to keep the application site of an immunizing virus as small as is compatible with efficacy. The deposit of dry vaccine is therefore preferably as small as is compatible with efficacy, of the general order of 1-5 millimeters in greatest dimension. The spread of reinfective exudate from a resulting pustule should also preferably be minimized. The latter is preferably accomplished by providing an air space or absorbent material around the perimeter of the surface holding the dry vaccine deposit, rather than a continuous compliant nonabsorbent surface. Also, the reinfective exudate develops only after the virus has become fully active and abundant; timely removal of the present device, permitting the site to air dry, is preferred.

In the drawing, in which no dimension, actual or relative to other parts of the drawing, is to be regarded as necessarily significant, FIG. 1 shows the deposit 50 of vaccine on support 40, in section, while FIG. 2 shows the same in plan. FIG. 3 shows the embodiment of FIGS. 1 and 2 modified by the addition of a compressible cushion member 30, which is desired to enhance compliant skin contact with deposit 50. FIG. 4 shows support 40 carrying vaccine deposit 50, being provided with pressure-sensitive adhesive means 20, whereby the support 40 and adhesive constitute bandage means 10.

In FIG. 5, support 40 is backed with compression means (or cushion) as an entrapped air bubble. When bandage means 10 is held by pressure-sensitive adhesive 20, bubble 30 urges deposit 50 into good contact with the skin of the patient to be immunized.

In FIG 6, small prefabricated bandage 10 with adhesive 20, carrier surface with perforations bears on its skin-approaching surface deposit of the virus.

FIG. 7 is similar to FIG. 6 except that perforations are omitted, and virus 50 is a line, applied by a rolling printer wheel or quill.

In FIG. 8, virus deposit 50 is supported on support 40 here produced as a pinnacle arising from bandage means 10, circumferentially surrounded by cushion means 22 bearing adhesive 20. In this form, spread of reinfective vesicular exudate is minimized.

In the preferred embodiments of this invention, the surface of carrier means 40 is inherently impermeable to moisture, in the sense that it'acts as a barrier to the ready passage of moisture. In the case of the'perforated form, the surface between perforations is more preferably impermeable.

EXAMPLE 1 In a representative practice of this'invention, a device according to this invention was prepared. A pooled cowpox vaccine, partially finished for medical use in conventional vaccination, provided the virus. The aqueous saline cowpox vaccine differed from the standard vaccine only in the absence of humectant. In virus titer the vaccine was similar to other commercial vaccines.

A small, commercial, pressure-sensitive bandage provided the carrier means for the virus. The skinapproaching actual bandage surface, but not the adhesive area, was covered with a small area'of commercial, household-type sheet plastic believed to have been 0.5 mil polyolefin sheet. At approximately the midpoint of the skin-approaching surface of the plastic-covered bandage, a 0.02 ml. drop of the vaccine was applied, and permitted to air dry.

The bandage with dry virus deposit was applied high on the outer aspect of the upper arm of a youngadult Caucasian male volunteer at a spot free from evident surface features and in particular free from'other vaccination scars, and application was made with the dry virus deposit urged against the skin of the volunteer. Thereafter, the device was left undisturbed for about8 hours while the volunteer carried on otherwise normal activities.

At the end of about 8 hours, the device was removed. No other treatment of any sort was employed, and the site was observed. 24 hours after application of the device, typical pustule formation had begun and at the end of 48 hours, a completely conventional active vaccination site,commonly called a take, was evident. The course of the entire vaccination procedure, except for the means of application of the virus, was completely routine.

EXAMPLE 2 The following test was conducted to evaluate the performance of the new immunizing devices in vaccinating guinea pigs against mumps. Immunizing devices were made by making a 2 cm. square of folded cotton gauze, and adhering the gauze in the center of a larger square of adhesive tape. The gauze was covered with a layer of cellulose dialysis membrane, leaving sufficient adhesive tape bare of membrane to hold the device on the 1 guinea pig. A drop of about 0.025 ml. of a commercial mumps vaccine was placed in the center of the membrane, atop the square of cotton gauze, and the vaccine was dried at room temperature.

Immunizing devices were affixed to the shaved flank of each of ten guinea pigs; two untreated guinea pigs were held as controls. The devices were left'on the pigs for 24 hours. I

After a three-week period, during which *time'four of the guinea pigs died for reasons unrelated to the'experiment, serum samples were prepared from blood drawn from each guinea pig. The conventional mumps hemagglutination test was then performed in the following manner. Each serum sample was serially diluted with phosphate-buffered physiological saline to dilutions from 1:4 to 1:128. Four hemagglutination units of mumps virus were added to each diluted serum sample, and the samples were shaken. Red blood cells were then added to each diluted serum sample, and the samples were allowed to stand for two hours atroom temperature. The diluted samples were then shaken again, stored at 4C. overnight, and the extentof hemagglutination was read in the morning.

The extent of hemagglutination observed ineach diluted sample is reported below" as a rating. Ada'sh indicates no hemagglutination, 4 indicates complete hemagglutination, and l, 2, or 3 indicates successively more complete hemagglutination. The lack of hemagglutination in a diluted sample indicates that the antibodies in the serum have neutralized the hemagglutination capability of the added virus. Therefore, the more highly with one of the new devices. An immunizing device carrying 0.025 ml., before drying, of commercial measles vaccine was made in the same way that the mumps immunizing devices above were made. The device was EXAMPLE 4 A human volunteer was immunized against measles the serum can be diluted before hemagglutination deadhered to the volunteers upper arm at a spot free velops, the more complete the immunization of the test from other vaccination scars, and left in place during animal. a normal 8 hour working day. A blood sample was Dilution Guinea Pig No. 1:4 1:8 1:16 1:32 1:64 1:128

2463 2 4 4 4 2464 2 4 4 2465 2 4 4 4 2466 1 4 4 4 4 4 2467 2 4 4 4 4 2468 Control 2 3 4 4 4 4 2470 Control 4 4 4 4 4 4 2472 2 4 4 4 4 The data show very effective immunization of the antaken before the immunizing device was affixed, and imals. The controls showed complete hemagglutination post-vaccination blood samples were taken 14 and 42 a a di as o as and at 6 at the most In days after the vaccination. Hemagglutination tests were contrast, two of the test animals showed complete hemrun as described above on serum separated from the agglutination only at 1:32 dilution, and the lowest diluthree blood samples, with the results below. tion at which a test animal gave complete hemagglutination was one-eighth. Therefore, immunization with the devices gave at least two-fold and perhaps eightfold increase in immunity against mumps. Dilution EXAMPLE 3 1:4 1:8 1:16 1:32

The ability of the devices to immunize guinea pigs fi b f ggzs g Sample 1 against mumps was evaluated in a second test. In gensamgle 1 3 4 era], the test was run as above. One group of five pigs was vaccinated as above with a standard mumps vaccine. A second group of five pigs was vaccinated in the same way with a trivalent vaccine containing mumps, The results of the test above were also evaluated by measles, and rubella antigens. the serum-neutralization test. AV-2 cell culturees were When the pigs were bled, group pooled serum samgrown in medium 199 until confluent cell sheets had ples were prepared by mixing in equal volume of serum formed. Serial dilutions of the three serum samples, from each pig of each group. l-lemagglutination tests taken the day of and 14 and 42 days after vaccination, were then performed on the pooled samples as dewere made in medium 199. Portions of virulent measles scribed above, using mumps virus as the hemagglutivirus each containing -500 TCID of virus were nation reagent. added to the diluted serum samples, and the samples Dilution 1:4 1:8 1:16 1:32 1:64 1:128 1:256

lntact skin Group A 2 3 4 4 Group B- 3 4 4 4 Control 2 4 4 4 4 Trivalcnl vaccine The data above show clearly that the guinea pigs were allowed to stand for one hour at 4C. Aliquots of were immunized by the device. Blood samples from the each diluted sample were added to each of two duplicontrol animals were completely agglutinated at 1:32 cate cell cultures. dilution, and partially agglutinated at 1:16. In contrast, The cell cultures were then incubated at 36C., and one group of vaccinated animals showed complete were observed at 6 and 15 days. Presence or absence hemagglutination at 1:128 dilution of the blood samf cyt p th g n effect a d by irus was ples, the other group of animals, at 1:64. Vaccination noted at each observation. Presence of CPE at an obwith the immunizing devices therefore accomplished a sefvation is shown below as absence 8S e 1 twoto four-fold increase in the pigs immunity to y O atio s are n parentheses. mumps a significant change. The lack of CPE in a culture indicates that the serum antibodies have neutralized the added virus. The more highly the virus can be diluted before CPE appears, therefore, the more complete the immunization.

dilutions of the measles virus used. Equal volumes,

Dilution 0 Days, Culture 1 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) ('t') 0 Days, Culture 2 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 0(+) 14 Days, Culture 1 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) l4 Days, Culture 2 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 42 Days, Culture 1 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) H+) 42 Days, Culture 2 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) 0(0) The controls for the test consisted of tenfold 1 Two cultures from each serum pool were tested at each dilution.

equal to the volume used in each diluted sample above, of the diluted virus were added to 10 cell cultures of AV-2 cells. The results below confirm that the dose of virus added to each culture contained approximately 50-500 TCID Dilution Cultures Showing CPE Undiluted 10/ l 0 l 0" l0! l0 1 0' l 0 l 0 0/ l 0 The volunteer, of course, had some immunity against measles before the test began. Therefore, the increase in measles immunity was not as dramatic as it would have been in a nonimmune individual such as an infant. Nevertheless, the serum-neutralization data indicate a fourfold increase in measles antibody was accomplished by application of the new device.

EXAMPLE 5 make a control pool. The pigs were bled again 19 days after the devices had been adhered to their shaved flanks for 24 hours. The samples from the pigs of each group were pooled and tested by the serum-neutralization test which was explained above.

It is clear from the data above that the new immunizing devices immunized the guinea pigs against measles to the extent of a twoto four-fold increase in measles antibody.

I claim:

1. A device for use in immunizing an animal which sweats through its skin, against smallpox, mumps or measles, which comprises a deposit of an immunizing amount of a dry, avirulent, live, immunizing virus on a bengin, virus-compatible surface supported on means for holding such virus deposit in contact with the unbroken skin of the animal to be immunized, said virus being a virus for immunizing against one or more of smallpox, mumps, and measles.

2. A device of claim 1 which the virus is present in the amount of from about 10 to about 10 EID and is distributed on said surface.

3. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is a combination of viruses selected from the viruses for immunizing against smallpox, mumps, and measles.

4. A device of claim 1 in which the benign, viruscompatible surface is moisture-impermeable.

5. A device of claim 1 in which the perimeter of the benign, virus-compatible surface is isolated from nearby structure by an air space. v

6. A device of claim 1 in which the perimeter of the benign, virus-compatible surface is surrounded by an absorbent material on said support.

7. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against smallpox.

8. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against mumps.

9. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against measles.

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE CERTIFIQATE OF i' i Paten t No. 5,8575% Dated September 2 19% Invent fls) Frederick T. Counter It is certified that error appears in the above-identified patent and that said Letters Patent are hereby corrected as shown below:

l "1 Column 7, line 27, "one-eighth" should read 1:8

Column 8, line 58, "culturees should read --cul'tures,--.

Column 10, line 52, "on means" should read on a means The word "IMMUNICATIONY' in, the Title should read -IMMUNIZATION- Signed and sealed this 11th day of February 1975.

(SEAL) Attest:

C. MARSHALL DANN RUTH C. MASON Commissioner of Patents" I Arresting Officer and Trademarks 

1. A device for use in immunizing an animal which sweats through its skin, against smallpox, mumps, or measles, which comprises a deposit of an immunizing amount of a dry, avirulent, live, immunizing virus on a bengin, virus-compatible surface supported on means for holding such virus deposit in contact with the unbroken skin of the animal to be immunized, said virus being a virus for immunizing against one or more of smallpox, mumps, and measles.
 2. A device of claim 1 which the virus is present in the amount of from about 104 to about 108 EID50 and is distributed on said surface.
 3. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is a combination of viruses selected from the viruses for immunizing against smallpox, mumps, and measles.
 4. A device of claim 1 in which the benign, virus-compatible surface is moisture-impermeable.
 5. A device of claim 1 in which the perimeter of the benign, virus-compatible surface is isolated from nearby structure by an air space.
 6. A device of claim 1 in which the perimeter of the benign, virus-compatible surface is surrounded by an absorbent material on said support.
 7. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against smallpox.
 8. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against mumps.
 9. A device of claim 1 in which the virus is for immunizing against measles. 